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“We have two duties to discuss today, which is why I have called you all here,” Erick said, while seated on his chair in his throne room.

He wasn’t on his throne. His chair was one of many others exactly like it, which circled a round table in the middle of the room. Up above, the roof was a tessellation of glass triangles and cloudy blue sky higher still, while the walls of the room were carvings of trees, and decorative lightning.

Zolan, Mox, Raingorl, Aisha, Volaro, and Burhendurur sat around the table with Erick. Each of them had a copy of the paperwork Zolan and Mox and Erick had finalized this morning. The other four Overseers had read it already, for Erick had given them hours to do so, and now they were here.

Erick said, “One of the duties is much easier to finish with than the other, so we’ll do that first. The end of the year is approaching and this means Shadow’s Feast. Hopefully nothing happens, but I want assurances that nothing will happen, so... Goldie? Are you here?”

Zolan gave a little sigh; he was hoping that this would not happen, that Erick would not call out to the Darkness. Most others at the table shared his sentiment, but Burhendurur and Volaro, the dragons, were ready for a fight if it came to that. Goldie had been spotted here and there over the last few months so Erick had hoped that an actual talk with her wouldn’t lead to this, but now they were here and Erick was not backing down.

The Shade of Assassination stepped out of the air to Erick’s right, going down to one knee. Her black armor and her large floating, plank of a sword gleamed in the cloudy sunshine. “My king. The Darkness has no plans for endangering the world this Shadow’s Feast. But since we are on this topic, he would not be angry if you decided to throw your own party.”

Ah…

This was going one of the ways that Erick did not want it to go, but it was better to confront these problems than to ignore them.

Erick asked, “Should I consult Melemizargo directly for his wants?”

“That would be for the best, in this one’s humble opinion.”

“Then that is what I will do. Later. Thank you, Goldie.”

Goldie stood up and vanished into the air, like she was never here.

Erick turned back to the table and saw sudden fear in almost everyone’s eyes. He rapidly decided, “I’ll talk to him later and on my own, if you all want. Or I could try to call him now. A show of hands who wants me to call him now, please.”

Every hand remained on the table.

“Moving on to the main topic, then.” Erick continued, “Kiri, Mox and the Office of the Overseer, and Burhendurur and the Office of Enforcement, are about 90% done with securing the 100 kilometer ring surrounding the lake. Beyond that land lies a triple set of ringed walls which Burhendurur’s skeletal forces continue to prowl and empty of mimics, though we haven’t had an incident of a mimic in the last few days. Burhendurur, Mox, and my own [Cascade Imaging] assures me that we’re ready to accept settlements. Which is the main topic for today.

“We have three groups of people seeking primarily asylum, refuge, or opportunity, here under the aegis of Candlepoint. All of you have read the proposals and the reports collected and organized by the House, and now, we will decide who gets to live here.”

Burhendurur and Volaro looked across the table at their equals, worry and brief flashes of hate swirling behind their eyes. Zolan, Mox, Aisha, and Raingorl, stared back. The people from Ar’Cosmos wanted their own proposed city to happen. The people from everywhere else did not.

“Let us start with Ar’Cosmos’ offer.” Erick sided with Ar’Cosmos on this one, saying, “Ar’Cosmos is getting a proper settlement, and it won’t be a punitive one. Though it will be far away from everyone else in order to stave off any potential dragon fights. Pick a spot on the map, Burhendurur and Volaro, and explain how you will be using that land.”

Burhendurur spoke for both of them, saying, “Ar’Cosmos chooses the southwest corner of the lake, including the southern side and the western side. A full 3/8ths of the lakeside. We have a hundred thousand people willing to move here within the month, and so we need all of the space we have suggested. We also desire a Gate from here to the northern edge of the Forest of Glaquin, and one to the beaches of Quintlan, specifically at the Ar’Civ Delta. We do not require an embassy on Gate Road. We would prefer these Gates to be at our new city, but if we have to do it, then we could accept Gates on the Financial District road.”

Erick had expected them to try and take more than they should, and to include some odd parts that were not in the proposal. The Gate to the Forest had been in the proposal, but the Gate to Quintlan was new. Taking up a full 3/8ths of available lakeside was unexpected, too. So Erick pushed back, “The southwest eighth of the map is acceptable. You may have the lakeside land north or east of you as well, but not both, for these other proposals will likely be granted in those spaces, and you cannot have all that land. Choose which area of land matters more.”

Burhendurur and Volaro had expected some pushback.

Volaro answered, “The southeastern side, the southern side, and all of the lakeside between, including another ten kilometer area between those two areas, and permission to expand the coast outward.”

Erick nodded, then looked to everyone else. “Problems?”

Erick had already seen a lot of problems with Ar’Cosmos’ proposal, but he wanted other opinions before he unilaterally decided what would happen.

And a lot was happening there in that room that had nothing to do with Erick; in the silences of looks and in the worries behind narrowed eyes. Violence was not in the cards, but violence could happen later, which is why Erick called this meeting to have this discussion. He wanted everyone to be on the same page, and for House Benevolence to weather this storm as a united force.

But with the addition of an Ar’Cosmos city on the lake, House Benevolence’s ‘united force’ could fracture.

Zolan spoke first, “What need is there for a Gate to Quintlan?”

Zolan’s tactic was to go after the most obvious problem, and not the insidious one, to see how Burhendurur and Volaro would react.

Burhendurur noticed this too, but he answered anyway, for that is what he had to do, “House Death has interests in the Fractured Citadels, as you very well know Zolan, and while that land is innately harmful to life, House Death can ensure that benevolent trade develops between the Fractured Citadels and Candlepoint. I, personally, can ensure that the dangers of that land never spill into this one.”

Zolan said, “Deathsoul shrooms originally came from Quintlan, as did the whole subset of monstrous mushroom people and spore magics. Those tragedies have always been blamed on adventurers and on the Shades, but you very well know, Burhendurur, that the only people who routinely travel between there and everywhere else are stupid adventurers that never have time to escape those types of monsters, to spread those spores, or dragons.”

Burhendurur glared at Zolan, saying, “That is slander.”

“You used those deathsoul shrooms to protect Ar’Cosmos for centuries.” Zolan said, “You purposefully spread them, because you were capable of subduing them and using them without suffering the side effects. All the rest of the Forest of Glaquin suffered, though. It wasn’t until our King’s undertaking with Treehome that the menace of the shrooms has been handed down the road to next century’s problem.”

Burhendurur opened his mouth—

But Erick was the one to speak next. “Ar’Cosmos is getting property by the lake. Let us focus on solving future problems instead of dragging up speculative history, no matter how true it might be. In that spirit, I have a suggestion for Ar’Cosmos’ new city, to better integrate the incoming people with what we have already built, and also to break the power block that would arise from the introduction of a hundred thousand more people to this land.”

Burhendurur held his tongue, though he was ready to argue against whatever foolishness Erick was about to spout. Others were more reserved, though Zolan was glad that Erick was tackling the issue of a hundred thousand more people suddenly making a city in these lands; that many people was a central problem to Ar’Cosmos’ request.

When no one interrupted, Erick continued, “Ar’Cosmos will not get the three lands they desire, of the southern edge, the southwestern edge, and the lands between. Instead, the people who were going to settle in the lands between now settle in Candlepoint.” A few people around the table gave a quick intake of breath, though none were too loud about that. “These people will fall under Candlepoint’s purview, and Candlepoint will continue to grow, which is to the benefit of us all.”

Erick let that percolate.

Volaro spoke up, “This is a highly unorthodox measure to take, my king.”

“You would split our people?” Burhendurur asked, rhetorically.

Zolan rhetorically asked, “How else are we to break up the power of a sudden influx of a hundred thousand people into these lands?”

Burhendurur pounced on that, saying, “We can control our own.”

“Which is the problem,” Mox said, choosing to speak for the first time. “You will control your own and thus control everything eventually. Even Erick’s measure of splitting your power is not enough. Half of your people should go to Candlepoint instead of a new city, and they should be under the rules and laws of Candlepoint, not your own. Even this much is likely not enough, for inviting a hundred thousand people into this land is like inviting a foreign army to make a city right beside your borders.” She looked to Erick. “You should deny half of these people, and preferably a lot more. 10,000 people would be an easier number to handle, but even that is double the size of Candlepoint.”

Candlepoint had regained a few people since Erick’s declaration of Wizardry months ago, but they were still a fraction of their former size. Erick did not feel that Mox’s complaint was that valid, for he was still in power here, but he certainly could use her words to force Ar’Cosmos into something more reasonable.

Erick said, “If Ar’Cosmos needs to vent a hundred thousand people, then they need to vent a hundred thousand people. What would the rest of the world like to see out of Ar’Cosmos’ new, open cities?”

A bit of silence. A lot of staring.

Aisha spoke up, “Quarantine zones around the Gates, and the Gates go onto the Financial Road and not in the city itself. A political structure more standard, like in Candlepoint, so that we can address problems through one governing power instead of going through three individual houses. If the Houses of Ar’Cosmos are to come here in full or in part, which I am sure they will, then they will be subject to that political structure. Your city will be subject to the rule of House Benevolence, and your rulers will swear fealty to our Apparent King and Wizard of Benevolence. Furthermore, you will be allowed 30,000 people maximum, with 5,000 of those people headed off to Candlepoint, to live there.”

Volaro eyed Aisha. “You would have us beg for scraps and our people starve! We have a need to vent 100,000, and so we have asked for 100,000.”

Before anyone else could speak, Erick said, “Let us table this offer for now, and move onto the other two, for the words we have over those might influence the words we have about Ar’Cosmos' new city.”

The anger in the room pulled back.

Erick moved on to the next packet. “We have a collective request from Stratagold and Oceanside to accept refugees from Portal and the Tribulations of Nelboor. This second group originally began as Cultists of Melemizargo from Nelboor, in those Tribulations, but after my [Blessing of Empathy] and after the Church of Koyabez helped them to solidify under a more productive banner, they have been gathering others from around the world. Mostly people from monster disaster areas, but a lot of people from the lands around Songli, as well. They want to move here, and there’s about 38,000 of them. All they want is to make some homes in a safe land. The details will be worked out later, but are there any general objections to this request?”

No one seemed to feel the need to say anything.

Aisha spoke just because someone needed to. “As long as they swear fealty to you, then Stratagold has no problem with Empathy-blessed Cultists forming a city. I would ask that whatever governing structure they create is as easy to work with as the current structure of Candlepoint.”

Erick said, “Then we’ll begin talks with them soon.

“Moving on.

“The third group wishing to create a city here at Candlepoint is the Dicers, out of the Sovereign Cities. According to them their leadership is in tatters after a failed peace talk where Charme brought bombs instead of words, and no one brought a [Zone of Peace] from Koyabez. They are 5,000 people, and they are tired of fighting a war that never gained the overall support of the people. They seek asylum.” Erick said, “I would have told them to move into Candlepoint, but they will likely be targeted by the Sovereign Cities, and especially by Charme, so I want them away from our main areas of commerce and other people.”

Aisha spoke first, “I believe with the nature of this petitioner, and with the vast increase in local populations of people, that we should now discuss the deployment of your Denial Spheres; what sort of Denials you will be putting out there, and where you will be placing them. And also: are they necessary? Most cities in the Crystal Forest do not have Denial Magics of any sort, though all the rest of the world usually has some sort of control on the power of the local population in order to prevent tragedies.”

About a week ago Erick had managed to make iron work as well as platinum for large runic webs. He was still in the process of turning a spherical prototype into a square Gate, but Denial Spheres were easy to make. Erick had planned on putting them all over the place, using them like Songli used the Void Song to prevent destructive things like [Stoneshape] or [Fireball] from being used in public places. Those Void Songs only covered the main cities of Eralis, Alaralti, and Holorulo. Those were the most populated parts of the Highlands, though, because all that denial magic made trusting your neighbors a lot easier.

For the Greensoil Republic, they used archmages who had spent points in order to purchase the spell [Weaken Monsters], to then use that spell across that entire country. When used properly, [Weaken Monsters] inhibited all monsters from gaining levels past 10, meaning most people in the Greensoil Republic only gained levels to the natural maximum of around 13-16, depending on spell and skill choices. But the problem with [Weaken Monsters] was that if the gridwork casting of that spell somehow missed a monster, and the month-long spell duration lapsed, those missed monsters would enter a Rage-like state and rapidly begin to gain levels, and tear through a countryside full of low level people.

The Wasteland Kingdoms had a different way to control their population. They shackled mages with regulations and used routine checks where people displayed their Statuses and accumulated fines or soul debts with demons if they were caught having a restricted spell without having the corresponding paperwork and clearances from the Magisterium or a kingdom.

Treehome didn’t have any regulations at all, which is one of the reasons Erick liked them more than most other places. But Treehome was also filled with orcols who healed from almost all damage through simple Health-restoration spells, and they had Arbors to look over everyone. The Arbors were a pretty big part of why Treehome was such a good place to live.

People couldn’t use Spatial Magic in the Underworld because of Melemizargo’s influence. While that restriction cut down on a lot of utility magic down there, and had cost many, many people their lives as monster hordes overflowed their defenses, the absence of Spatial Magic made it easy to defend locations. Across almost the entire Surface world, places used anti-[Teleport] enchantments in order to protect their more vulnerable locations. There was no need to do that in the Underworld.

And the Sovereign Cities just prevented all Registrars from entering their lands without working under a local lord. No one was allowed to Matriculate outside of the control of the governments, or without a soldiering contract with the local lords. That lack of magical power and Script-enabled people was why that whole part of the world was a shithole, in Erick’s opinion. If that nobility ever gave Erick too much of a reason to turn their world upside down, then he might just do that. But for now, taking in the Dicers and ending that civil war over there seemed like a decent thing to do, which is why Erick was considering this Dicer request for asylum.

Erick still wasn’t sure exactly how he was going to distribute the Denial Spheres around Candlepoint in order to achieve the same effects as the Void Song, or [Weaken Monsters], or all the other various magic control spellwork that existed here and there in most of the world, but he knew where to start.

“Burhendurur,” Erick asked, “Where would you place Denial Spheres, to enable easier trusting of neighbor and neighbor, here in Candlepoint? What would you put in them? Each sphere has about a kilometer radius and can be imbued with any sort of Denial magics.”

Burhendurur frowned a little, but he didn’t have to think long to have an answer, “Put them everywhere that there are people, and with a [Zone of Peace] inside, if you can do that. Maybe [Spatial Denial], too, but that is rather itchy, and people would need to quickly evacuate if something terrible should happen, so blocking Spatial Magic is a bad idea. Maybe smaller [Spatial Denial] spheres in certain locations, to be decided.”

Zolan, Mox, Aisha, and Raingorl were surprised by that answer. Volaro was not surprised. He and Burhendurur had probably discussed this exact question before, because it was open knowledge what Erick wanted to do with these Denial Spheres, but here the dragons were, talking about inhibiting their own planned city beside the lake.

Erick was only a little bit surprised, but not because of Burhendurur and Volaro making a concession before they had to. He was surprised at their actual suggestion. Erick said, “I had considered [Zone of Peace], but [Zone of Peace] is not very smart when imbued inside a runic web.”

Volaro narrowed his eyes a little. “It still transforms harmful magic into a [Cleanse]s, yes?”

“The definition of ‘harmful’ is less nuanced when the spell is inside a sphere.” Erick said, “Inside a normal [Zone of Peace], if I cast a [Fireball] at you, it would turn into nothing. Inside a runic web [Zone of Peace], the same [Fireball] will become a gust of weak Force and Fire and a lot of a [Cleanse], but the [Cleanse] will be as weak as [Cleanse] inside Ar’Cosmos; only able to really clean up water and surface dirt. The Fire and Force might brush your hair or set small papers on fire. But what is worse, is that a [Fireball] cast near someone, without the intent to harm a person standing beside the impact, will retain full power. [Zone of Peace] in a sphere is not smart at all.”

Burhendurur frowned a little.

Volaro said, “Add in a Stone Denial, and put them absolutely everywhere that there are people, and include an Undertow drain to power them, same as you have the Gates. This will be more than enough general security. Even the Void Songs of Songli are not perfect.”

“Perfection is the enemy of good,” Burhendurur said, nodding.

Erick sat a bit straighter. “Ah. We have that saying back on Earth, too.”

“Not surprising. It is a good saying.” Burhendurur said, “And I agree with Volaro’s suggestion. Excising the ability for the populace to do direct damage toward each other will be a great boon for our rapidly growing population.” He added, “For Ar’Cosmos does need to ‘vent’ 100,000 people. We were originally going to request a grant for 150,000 people, but that would have met with too much skepticism.”

Zolan scoffed, “Like 100,000 is any more reasonable.”

Mox said, “I would like to return to this Dicer request...”

They spoke for a few hours.

- - - -

In a Private space, in House Benevolence, Erick sat across from someone he hadn’t seen in a while; Illustrious Moon. The Head of House Fae looked exactly as he remembered; tall, almost incani, with amethyst-like horns done in deep purple and all the rest of her a study in violet. She had taken a day to get here after the meeting with the Overseers about new cities yesterday, but here she was, ready to talk turkey.

She smiled softly, saying, “It’s good to see you again, Erick. I love the House.”

… They were still in the pleasantries part of the meeting, apparently. Erick wanted to get right down to it, though, for he had even more meetings and magic to make after this. He couldn’t just blow off Illustrious’s attempts at pleasantries, though. This meeting would determine the entire future of Ar’Cosmos’ direct presence here at Candlepoint.

Erick decided to go with, “It’s good to see you, too, Illustrious, now that I’m not under mental restraints and able to make my own decisions about life.”

Illustrious pulled back her joy, letting her true dragonic self appear in the deep purple of her eyes. “How long will it take for you to get over that? Realistically?”

“As soon as I can no longer be worried of such hostile actions.”

Illustrious smiled brightly this time. “Then I will ignore the hostility of your words and trust the truth of your benevolence that this meeting will be productive for all of Ar’Cosmos. Who are your allies, I might add.”

“You are my allies,” Erick agreed. “And so are the wrought, and Oceanside. I hope the wrought now living in Ar’Cosmos are working out for everyone involved. No one has been ensorcelled yet, nor have they given you cause to do so, correct?”

“Correct!” Illustrious Moon asked, “Now, shall we talk of the ensorcellments you plan to place upon the future cityspaces of our land around your lake?”

“The Denial Spheres will happen to Candlepoint, too, and for now those Spheres will just have [Zone of Peace]. No anti-[Stoneshape] or [Spatial Denial]s, or anything like that; just [Zone of Peace]. It’s not a full-block on all magic, but it will prevent the most egregious and directly harmful uses of magic; mostly targeted spells and other things made with the intention of harming. There will be a lot of nuances for people to work out, but a Denial Sphere will likely be a hard counter to magics like the Red Dot that almost struck Spur, for I have done some testing with the spheres and [Fireball] and my words to Burhendurur and Volaro yesterday were mistaken.

“Very large spells are always subject to a runic [Zone of Peace], apparently.

“It does very well against smaller, more insidious magics, like those from mental monsters and [Force Trap]s placed where people can trigger them.” Erick said, “That Denial of Red Dots and the inhibition of monsters using esoteric and directly harmful magics is the most important thing.”

Illustrious Moon’s shoulders relaxed as she sat there, violet eyes widening a little like she was listening to a miracle. Perhaps that was exactly how she thought of Erick’s words. After Erick finished, it took Illustrious a moment to gather her thoughts.

“I understand that this [Zone of Peace] comes from Koyabez and it is used widely in peace talks the world over, but it is rather new, because it originally came from you. The Script stripped it from you.” Illustrious asked, “Will the fact that this is not actually your magic be a problem? I understand you have working prototypes, but godly-given spells usually have a hard time being stuffed into any sort of mortal working.”

Erick had had a conversation about all of that with Koyabez yesterday, after that meeting with the Overseers. Apparently, just like the divine [Gate] which people bought into when they were on the Worldly Path, paying 10 points instead of walking the Path, [Zone of Peace] was the same sort of situation. Godly magic did not fit into most mortal machines. You couldn’t enchant a Gate without having made your own Gate Space, and you couldn’t enchant [Zone of Peace] into a working because it was also a godly magic, and not really your own.

But Erick was still the creator of [Zone of Peace].

That spell had been ripped from his soul by the Script, but it was still a Benevolence-based spell, and Erick was, and continued to be, Elemental Benevolence itself. So the lines got a bit blurry there.

Par for the course for a Wizard.

“I did originally make this magic, and you are right that it is not strictly mine. I can only say that I have leave from Koyabez to imbue this spell into any workings I choose, it is Benevolence-based, and apparently it is still a part of me. And [Renew] helps bridge gaps like that rather well; that’s what [Renew] was made to do.” Erick said, “The only problem will be when a sphere breaks, for I will be the only one able to make more of them. This is not a perfect long term solution, but it is a good solution for now, and I’m sure Koyabez himself will be able to help others to make much more permanent artifact-level Denial Spheres with [Zone of Peace] if he desires, or if someone asks him properly.”

Illustrious hmm’d in slight disappointment, then asked, “Will [Zone of Peace] inhibit the peaceful enforcement of the law?”

“They’ll have to adjust how they capture people; [Force Wall]s to trap, and that sort of thing. Nothing targeted at all, and not even any spellwork that gets too big.”

“A difficult set of restrictions. But doable. We would ask you to include [Spatial Denial] in the spheres on our lands.”

“… That is a surprise.”

“How so?” Illustrious Moon said, “Ar’Cosmos has always been anti-[Teleport], for if one used Spatial Magics in there then they might end up bisected in a wall. The lack of Spatial Magic in the common person does wonders for security. It will stop people from [Teleport]ing in and committing genocide, which is a fear of ours, Erick.”

“… Ah. Okay.” Erick said, “I can include [Spatial Denial] in the working.”

“Appreciated.” Illustrious Moon said, “I would also ask for you to allow the full number of requested residents to live upon your shores. 100,000. I could ask for a real number of 145,000 and bargain you down to 100,000, but I and my fellow Heads felt that was disingenuous. Our necessary evacuations number 98,500, but rounding up will account for stragglers.”

Her tone was even, but her worry was real. She wasn’t lying about her numbers at all.

Erick focused. “What’s going on in Ar’Cosmos, Illustrious?”

Illustrious smiled softly, and set off a bomb, “All the dragons of Veird are required to move to Ar’Cosmos by the end of the year in order to fulfill the pact made between Rozeta and Fairy Moon. Dragons are being evicted from Veird. All across the world. Right now.

Ah.

Holy shit.

Incredulous, Erick began, “She’s evicting all of the—”

Fairy Moon stepped into the private space, looking around like she needed to attack something. But then a half second passed and she saw where she was. She calmed, going from battle-ready to something more relaxed. The vibrancy of her pink and green eyes died down with her thoughts of threats needing to be killed— And then lit up with joy as she spotted Erick. She happily said, “Erick! So good to greet you! We should see each other some time soon, but not right now.” She turned to Illustrious. “I am needed not-here. Is this important?”

Erick narrowed his eyes at the fairy, saying, “Hello, Fairy Moon.”

Fairy Moon nodded to him—

She paused and recognized that Erick was mad, but Fairy Moon would not dwell on that; she was too busy. She focused on Illustrious.

Illustrious said, “I am discussing the nature of our homes on the lake with Erick, and of the eviction of the dragons.”

“Ah! I see.” Fairy Moon stepped away, vanishing into the manasphere, her voice trailing her, “I am not needed now. Talk to you another time!”

Erick frowned at the empty air. Then he turned to Illustrious. “That’s how she’s taking her agreement with Rozeta?” Erick recalled Rozeta’s words perfectly, “ ‘Here now is an offer: You and your people both living and never-dead, keep the danger posed by dragon fights, on Veird and in your own lands, to at least the current level it is now, or lower, while accepting competent wrought and otherwise oversight inside Ar’Cosmos and other fae lands.’ That was the majority of it.” Erick said, “There was nothing in there about ‘remove all dragons from Veird’. And what about you?” A bit of anger crept into his voice. “What about my Overseers Burhendurur and Volaro?”

Erick suddenly had a lot more anger than just that, but he let that simmer.

Illustrious said, “All dragons directly subject to the Curse, or those subject to Fairy Moon’s whims, are required to move to Ar’Cosmos. Which is almost all of them. The only ones being allowed to remain on Veird are those who are Paradox’ed. Everyone else is coming to Ar’Cosmos— Them and all their families who want to join those dragons. We were rather stocked with dragons during your visit, but even that was not the height of our possible population. Considering all the families following… We’re getting stuffed, Erick.”

“Even with [Renew] making that land bigger?”

“Even with! You would think that with more space, there would be less of a fight for all of it, right? You would be wrong.” Illustrious Moon added, “Just like I was wrong.”

Erick frowned. “How come I haven’t heard of this before now?”

“It’s apparently been in the planning stages for months, but a lot of things suddenly happened in the last few days and now the plan is unfolding. I was not fully made aware of this until three days ago, when Fairy Moon dumped this plan onto the desks of every power of Ar’Cosmos. A few people have responded quickly to capture land and kick people out—” Illustrious Moon frowned, as she got into the meat of the story, “About half of the 100,000 people we marked for this new city aren’t aware that they are being kicked out, but heads of smaller houses and families are informing their people right now, as we speak, while Fairy Moon is moving across the entire world and informing those who will be evicted from Veird. Burhendurur and Volaro did not tell you the truth because no one out here knew the full truth. Honestly, we haven’t told them the whole truth, either, so that is no fault of their own. But I am telling you the full truth right now.” Illustrious said, “In a week all the world will know, but by that time Fairy Moon will have gotten to every holdout and given them her ultimatum. Before the end of the year, every dragon on Veird will either be in Ar’Cosmos… Or not.”

It was all monumental news.

Terrifying and new, and yet not wholly unexpected. Fairy Moon was expected to keep dragon fights from happening here on this side of reality, and what was the best way to do that? Move all the dragons to Ar’Cosmos, of course.

But something wasn’t adding up.

“I still don’t understand,” Erick asked, “Ar’Cosmos is expanding? You’re taking in a lot of new people, yes. But the land itself is larger. It should be large enough to hold everyone?”

Like she was speaking a truth that everyone already knew, Illustrious said, “Dragons are selfish, Erick. More selfish than I thought I knew. More selfish than you will likely ever know— at least in this world. We’ve already had several fights over new lands, and a lot of dragons throwing their power around in dangerous ways.” Illustrious digressed, “This evacuation of non-dragons from Ar’Cosmos is necessary, and not just to get them out of the way of those fights, but to prevent them from starting fights of their own. There are a lot of half-dragon families that are almost dragons in their own power, but not quite, and that is not good for all the incomers.

After a stabilizing period, I pray that many of the people we relinquish into your care will be able to come back to Ar’Cosmos, but I also hope that they are finally able to live their lives free, and under the real sun.” She looked to him, saying, “I hope that you keep the secret of dragons leaving Veird to yourself, Erick, for at least a few days. More, if you can. We don’t want to start— Well. There are about a million problems that could happen. For instance, we had a smuggler from Quintlan; mostly food and material goods, as most of our smugglers are. He’s a free dragon, and everyone in his organization knows he is a free dragon. He is the base of power for that smuggling ring. With this news, his entire organization has erupted in a civil war. Hundred people dead, at least.”

Ah…

This was going to get bad, eh?

But since Erick had to know the information that Illustrious didn’t want to speak of, he directly asked, “What happens when a dragon doesn’t go to Ar’Cosmos by the end of the year?”

Erick guessed what would happen already. An ‘ultimatum’ from Fairy Moon usually only ended one of two ways; either the person decided to do what Fairy Moon wanted, or…

“She kills them,” Illustrious Moon said, flatly. “If Melemizargo chooses to have a calm Shadow’s Feast this year, know that Fairy Moon already has all the chaos covered.” And then she set off another bomb, “If you haven’t already, you should expect some dragons to come your way soon. Within the day. Perhaps you already have a meeting with a dragon, and you just don’t know it yet? Those dragons will ask that you Paradox them into Benevolence, so that they might stay on Veird. Since you came upon your Wizardry naturally, you should be able to do this twisting of Dragon Essence without any damage to your self. This was how every House of Ar’Cosmos got its start.”

“… Right. Let’s… Let’s talk about that later.”

Illustrious tried to bring the conversation to a nicer place as she asked, “Can we discuss the nature of our refugees’ city on the lake? I was thinking we’d call it ‘Axiom’, as a way to establish it as a city and wish for it to always exist, but Inferno Maw wants to call it ‘Faefall’, for he is quite angry with Fairy Moon’s direction. Bright Smile has the middle-path suggestion of ‘Springkind’, as a place where our kind will always spring from.”

It was kind of surreal listening to Illustrious Moon talk of city names when Fairy Moon was changing how the entire world worked. The fallout of this decision will be immeasurable, but… Perhaps this was exactly what Rozeta had in mind when she gave her offer to Fairy Moon? In the end, the removal of dragons from Veird would be good for the average citizen.

… Maybe? Dragons might get into fights all the time with each other if they knew each other as a dragon, but when they were allowed to live, and not become tyrants, dragons were a force that readily took their hidden claws and spells to the monsters of Veird.

… The Dragon Stalkers were probably happy about this. Surely, they knew already?

Well whatever. Erick wasn’t going to tell them—

What about Al? Back at Spur?

Ah…

Al was going away, then?

That thought came upon Erick like a crashing wave out of nowhere, followed fast by several more waves. Worry and sorrow. Loss and failure to launch. Al was going to leave Spur and go to Ar’Cosmos. While Erick never got full confirmation that the Sewermaster of Spur was a dragon, he was 99% sure that Al was a dragon; the same black dragon who had crashed into that Flare Couatl and who took away Jane’s Dragon Essence so she could start healing from that poison. Would Savral be going with Al?

Erick found himself suddenly missing Al. That giant man was the first person who had taught Erick about magic, and who housed and protected him and Jane when they were new to this world. Sure, Al was rather bad at magic, but Erick certainly wasn’t a normal student.

Erick hadn’t checked up on Al or Savral at all since the end of the Worldly Path. He had seen Al, Savral… And Mog, the Guildmaster of Spur’s Adventurer’s Guild, and Sirocco Zago, the Guildmaster of Spur’s Mage Guild, and most everyone else who Erick had once called neighbor, and friend. But those sightings had been through Ophiel, and from far away. He hadn’t actually talked to any of them.

Suddenly, Erick knew he needed to talk to the people of Spur. He needed to talk to Al.

But he was here with Illustrious Moon, and they were talking about Ar’Cosmos’ city by the lake. He was here, for now. Later, he would see what was happening at Spur.

Erick looked to Illustrious, saying, “They are all fine names, but I would like to talk more about having some of your people move into Candlepoint, and not into your city. I would also like to talk more about the nature of the government you wish to build in this land… And what it means to Paradox Dragon Essence into something similar yet different. I might actually be doing some of that soon.”

Illustrious showed obvious relief when Erick spoke of Paradoxing Dragon Essence, but she chose to talk of city planning, first.

They spoke for two hours about the nature of Ar’Cosmos’ refugee city, how much Illustrious expected the city to remain a ‘refugee city’ when the population could freely return to Ar’Cosmos after the dragons settled in, and how well the refugee city was going to adhere to Erick’s and House Benevolence’s decrees which would be, of course, the actual law of the land. Erick had expected Illustrious to balk at that, and for the Houses of Ar’Cosmos to desire to be treated as equals to House Benevolence, but that wasn’t even a concern.

Illustrious put it best when she said, “The Houses remain in Ar’Cosmos, but we will open branch offices in this new city, and since this is your land, they are under your jurisdiction. I’ll even make sure they’re under the refugee city’s jurisdiction first, if that would make it easier on you.”

“It would. I have enough on my plate already so I won’t be looking over your branch offices at all. I want your new city to adhere to the structure we’re setting up already in Candlepoint, too. One mayor, like Mephistopheles, a law deciding branch, like Volaro, a law enforcing branch, like Slip, a sewermaster, like Ava, and however many organizers of the market you wish. Candlepoint has Zaraanka and Valok, for instance.”

“Then consider it done.” Illustrious said, “Now as for the laws of the lands, I approve of the systems you have smashed together under Volaro, but...”

They spoke of laws, and defenses, and all manner of minutiae that went into a city. They spoke of Gates linking the new city to the Gate District, like Erick had done with Candlepoint. Eventually, that conversation wound down, and they moved on to talk of Paradoxing dragons.

That explanation only took ten minutes, for that whole process was rather easy, according to Illustrious Moon. Erick simply needed to gain Dragon Essence until he was a full dragon, then Paradox himself into a Benevolence Dragon, and then match his own new nature to everyone he chose to change. There were complications, of course, for he could not do such a thing here on Veird; he would have to do this in Ar’Cosmos or else the Dragon Curse would grab him by the soul and not let go until he killed all the dragons he knew. That would likely go very, very poorly for all the world, but mostly for Erick, because Erick would go looking for Kirginatharp and the Second to Rozeta would slap him down hard.

“Other than all the possible problems, making a Benevolence Dragon is all rather straight-forward,” Illustrious said. “And Fairy Moon can finish off the process for you, perfectly.”

Erick was not comfortable with any of her words, and for multiple reasons.

Illustrious noticed Erick’s discomfort. “You can try alone if you wish, but I would not recommend it for a number of reasons. Dragons have tried this Paradoxing before, outside of Fairy Moon’s assistance, coming at the same problem from the other side; from being a dragon first and then collecting enough of their own mana to work that particular Wizardry. Usually this ends very poorly. I know of a few cases where they actually succeeded and become an existence that is not bound by the Curse, nor by the power of the Houses of Ar’Cosmos… But it’s not a real Paradoxing, and it fails without a great deal of upkeep. Upkeep which most cannot maintain, because those dragons who have succeeded were not Wizards. They were just very good at their specific types of magic and they had help of a different sort.”

“… Well that’s still rather unexpected. I was under the impression that the only ways out of the Curse were through your Houses?”

“You could have spent a decade with us in Ar’Cosmos if you had to, and you still would not have uncovered all of the secrets of our homeland. This failure would not have been because we were keeping those secrets from you, but just the simple fact that we have a lot of secrets.” Illustrious waved a hand. “And those minor successes a few dragons have managed to create, to escape the Curse, have never transferred well. And, as I said, they require upkeep, because they’re all unstable. If that upkeep fails then those few successes still out there in the world will have to come crawling back to Ar’Cosmos before the Curse reasserts itself and they destroy everyone they know. That’s not speculation, by the way; that has happened before, too.

“For as many years as the Curse has existed, people have been trying to escape it. Sometimes they half-succeed. And then they fail, and they come to Ar’Cosmos and get in line with everyone else for a chance at truly escaping the Curse through a House; through a Paradox of Death, Carnage, or Fae.

“I admit, though, that the only stable form of this Paradoxing magic is when you start with a Wizard and then add Dragon Essence, and then the Wizard Paradoxes themselves into being both at the same time. Every one of our Houses started this way. You might be able to do it on your own, but you do have to do it inside Ar’Cosmos. Submitting to Fairy Moon is simple easy, though.”

Erick managed to control his visceral, hateful, and destructive impulses into something smaller; a quiet breath, a stare, and, unexpectedly, a twitch of his left eye. And also an arm-thick zap of Benevolent lightning that arced off of his right hand and struck the floor, spreading black char where it lingered.

“Simple, eh?” Erick asked, his voice straining.

“Yes. It is simple.” Illustrious ignored the char on the ground, saying, “I know the facts of it are terrible for you, but—”

“I don’t want to talk about Paradoxing Benevolence dragons anymore.”

If someone came to Erick requesting to become a Benevolence Dragon, then he would [Reincarnation] them into not-a-dragon. He was never putting himself under Fairy Moon’s power ever again.

Illustrious moved on, saying, “Then let us speak of something I just remembered you wish to do: the integration of a portion of our fleeing citizens with the current structure of Candlepoint. How about 5,000 people from Ar’Cosmos going to Candlepoint? And they get a seat on Candlepoint’s council structure.”

“25%, and no seat; 25,000 people. They’ll have more than enough power by virtue of their population. No one will be allowed to move into your new city until Candlepoint is larger than yours, either, so any secondary evacuations will move into Candlepoint completely.”

“What a strange set of requirements.” Illustrious Moon asked, “Whatever for?”

“I want Candlepoint to be the largest city on the lake. It’s as simple as that.”

“Very well. Then...”

Erick felt himself relaxing as they moved back to talk of politics for a brief while. The conversation could have ended already, but Illustrious did not want to leave Erick on a sour note. Erick was glad for that.

When they eventually finished, Erick knew almost everything about who would be coming to Ar’Cosmos’ expansion by the lake, and he had even suggested a name of his own, since the other Houses did not seem to be in agreement yet; Weald.

“It’s an Earth name for ‘Forest’,” Erick said.

Illustrious said, “I’ll add it to the pile of suggestions.”

- - - -

Citadel Frostflower was located between the North Ar’Civ river and the South Ar’Civ river, in central Quintlan, west of where the two rivers joined to become the Ar’Civ river. This city was not the largest of the Fractured Citadels of central Quintlan. That honor went to Death Throne, further inland and sprawled across a thousand kilometers like an open-air labyrinth of stone castles, deep canyons of shadow, and lots of ooze. That place was filled with all manner of undead, both aware and not. Mostly not.

Frostflower was filled with undeath, too, but also a lot of life. It was perhaps the nicest and safest of the Fractured Citadels. Built in five concentric circles, with the outer circles shimmering with ice and filled with protective magics constantly layered down by the residents, Frostflower got its name from all those layers of spells. From the outside looking in, the place almost looked like an ephemeral, frosted flower. On the inside, it was a bustling land of mortals like any normal kingdom you would find anywhere, but it was ruled by undead masters in the central circle. Anyone could ascend to undeath in Frostflower, and become one of those masters if they wished. It took personal power, skill, and patronage to ascend, but those things came easy to those who tried. Usually.

The mortals toiled in the soil outside, growing magical plants in the hopes of one day ascending to undeath.

It wasn’t perfect, but it was one of the best places to be for a person like Quilatalap.

Many of the Archlich’s former students lived here. The master of this land could even trace her necromancy and power directly from Quilatalap himself.

That particular student had come to Quilatalap in a fury of worry and terror in the last hour, alerting him to a certain event that was probably going to happen any minute now. She wasn’t sure what was going to happen, but she needed Quilatalap there when it did. Fairy Moon was coming and she was bringing ultimatums. Maybe Quilatlap’s student could escape Fairy Moon, but probably not. One might be able to fight off that immortal fae a thousand times, but Fairy Moon only needed to win once.

… That saying sort of wore down when it came to Fairy Moon versus necromancers with phylacteries, but it was true enough.

In the main meeting hall, at the top of Frostflower Keep, where windows opened up in every direction so that the ruler of this land could see all of her domain at once, Quilatalap sat on a guest throne on a dais kept to the side. The guest dais and the guest throne were a recent addition.

The main dais dominated the center of the open-air tower, and Quilatalap’s former student waited there, coiled and ready to strike.

Zenipeq lorded over her domain, her flowing, frosty form curled into herself like she was a dragon-shaped wraith. She was not exactly a wraith, but if someone made that mistake, it was forgivable. She had been panicking when she had come to Quilatalap, worried out of her mind, but now she was settled and strong; a queen in her own country, which was exactly what she was.

Quilatalap still remembered when he found Zenipeq almost 1200 years ago. She was a dragon who had lost her life in a failed attempt to replicate the powers of the Houses of Ar’Cosmos, casting herself adrift in the mana as a barely-there wraith. Quilatalap helped her come back together because it seemed like the right thing to do, to help a fellow necromancer. When she came back to herself, Quilatalap gave her some small insights into Paradoxing Dragon Essence and Ice Essence. Zenipeq’s second attempt at Paradoxing her way into the powers of the Houses turned out much better, though she still fell short of the ultimate goal of a True Paradox, for she was not a Wizard. Even so, all that meant was a bit of maintenance every few years; to store her magic into a core that she could break later to use her own mana to reinforce herself properly—

Quilatalap saw a change in the mana long before Zenipeq did. He said, “She comes.”

Zenipeq settled her nerves, her large eyes flashing white and blue as she focused on the air in front of her. She saw it now, too. The mists in the room, which were always under her control, began to swirl outside of her control, like someone was floating invisibly through the windows and into the space. Fairy Moon certainly could have avoided such a display and come in without anyone knowing any better, but she was delivering proclamations today; not murder. Not yet.

Fairy Moon stepped onto the white stone before Zenipeq, her white, pink, and green clothes looking like flowery armor. She was physically smaller than one of Quilatalap’s legs, and much, much smaller than the gargantuan form of Zenipeq. The Ice Wraith Queen physically dominated the space, and her ghostly frozen mists spread even further, but no one was fool enough to believe that Fairy Moon wasn’t just as powerful.

“Why have you come to my kingdom, Fairy Moon,” Zenipeq demanded to know.

“Ultimatums and ultimate ends!” Fairy Moon said, “In accordance with the accords struck between me and the mistress of the Script, all dragons who are dealt the Curse are compelled to come to Ar’Cosmos within the week! No exceptions!”

Zenipeq startled, and there was no use in not showing that startling anymore. “A week! But I thought—” She cut herself off. She had thought they had till the end of the year.

Quilatalap had thought that, too. Damn.

Zenipeq regained some of her composure, then tried, “I am not a true dragon. I have ascended past the Curse and mortal flesh. I do not count myself among your kind, in any possible way, therefore your bindings have no place upon my person. And I have a kingdom here!” Zenipeq’s sorrow finally failed in the face of her anger. She shouted, “And I have been selling necessary goods to Ar’Cosmos for centuries! I AM DUE MORE RESPECT THAN YOU HAVE GIVEN ME, FAIRY MOON!” She pulled back a fraction, though her anger was now on full display in the rippling ice forming out of her mist, like snowflakes turned to swords and daggers. “I will remain here, in my place of power, and continue selling to Ar’Cosmos as I have. Rescind your ultimatum, leave, and I will forget this breach of decorum ever happened.”

It was a good thing composure rarely mattered with the fae, as it usually mattered with everyone else. Zenipeq was losing it. Zenipeq was facing the end of her long rule, though, so all of that was forgivable.

Fairy Moon was unmoved by Zenipeq’s words, because of course she wasn’t. “A true Paradox needs no preservation while yours requires copious consumption of cores. You could fall and fight with other deadly dragons at any damned time. You have before, you will again, and so—”

“The last time I lapsed was 350 years ago!”

Fairy Moon continued, “—you are required to return to ancestral Ar’Cosmos.”

Zenipeg’s frost swords faltered. She tried bargaining, “I want a month! Till the end of the year! I heard that is what you were giving everyone else! I want a month.” Softer, she said, “Please.”

Fairy Moon considered this, then she said what she was always going to say, “No.”

And then she vanished.

Her departure didn’t disturb any mist, or make any subtle sound—

Quilatalap turned his soul’s sights upon the alteration in the air. Ephemeral teeth ripped and tore at foreign magic, and soon, there was no more foreign magic. Fairy Moon had left.

Zenipeq collapsed to the floor. Great big tears of frozen death fell from her misty eyes as she breathed out, “Will my flower continue to blossom, once I am gone? Death Throne encroaches on our fields, always, and the oozes are getting violent, always, and… I don’t think I’ve done enough for my people, Quilatalap. Not nearly enough…” Her voice turned whispery, “The school is still filled with the living… They haven’t transitioned yet. I’m going to miss that joyous time.”

Quilatalap stood from his chair. He was not a harsh man when he did not need to be. Mostly, he tried to be as easy going as he could. But now was not the time to be an easy person. “Despair if you must over your personal loss, but do not fret for your people; they will be fine. You have built a lasting empire. It is unfortunate that neither of us can remain to see it continue, but truths are sometimes like that.”

Hope blossomed on Zenipeq’s face. She righted herself and stared down at Quilatalap. “You could be the king here! They will all fall in line and worship you as their creator if you will allow—”

“Nope.”

Zenipeq dropped her head to the ground again. Quiet tears flowed.

Quilatalap said, “I know myself, and one of those truths is that I am shit at governance. The most I can ever be anywhere is a simple guest with some appointed duties. If you put me in charge of anyone, then one of your people would inevitably ask me for something that I shouldn’t give them. I will, at the time, think that such information would not be harmful at all, and so I will acquiesce. And thus, in 25 years this entire place falls to some cataclysm that I enabled.” He said, “If the crusades don’t track me down and level this place, first, which is something that That Fae is absolutely going to try, now that she knows I am here and you will not be here to dissuade such attempts.”

Zenipeg’s frozen tears continued to collect upon the ground, piling beside her face.

Quilatalap felt a tug on his dead heart. He didn’t like seeing anyone in despair. “That Fairy is likely only giving you a week so that you can show up before the big rush, so you can claim properties before others.”

Zenipeg breathed out, “I don’t want to be a part of House Death, Quilatalap. They’re fine people but... I hate That Fairy.”

Ah. Well. That was a different problem entirely. Quilatalap hated That Fairy, too, but it was like hating storms or hating the color green; it was best to just stay away from those things if one could. Zenipeq would do fine in House Death, though, even if she didn’t want to—

Quilatalap wondered...

For the past three months, a certain topic had made its way across the world, and settled into the Fractured Citadels like a rabbit in a den of wolves. From the tallest citadels to the lowest caverns, and even beyond to the Underworld, everyone who was anyone had been in at least one debate about a certain truth, trying to understand how. How had such a magic happened outside of the Fractured Citadels, this land where Necromancy ruled with a billion skeletal fists? Had someone else come up with that type of magic before? And then hidden it?

Or was the Wizard’s magic truly so new?

What, exactly, was [Reincarnation] doing to a person, and why hadn’t they figured out that miracle first?

Quilatalap had participated in many of those conversations, himself. And now…

“If you wish to remain in this world, then it is time for you to see Erick Flatt, and to ask for a [Reincarnation].”

Zenipeq froze. After a moment, she steeled herself. She rose from her flat position, and gazed to the southeast. Past the Ar’Civ rivers, looking to the sky beyond. “Do you think he could make a Benevolence Dragon?”

“Absolutely. But would he? Doubtful.”

“… Then this is the end of my life as a dragon, one way or another. I won’t be going into Ar’Cosmos if I can help it.” Zenipeq turned back to Quilatalap. “Will you come with me, my old master? To Candlepoint? If the Wizard should grant my request, would you verify that it is me on the other side of that magic?”

“I will do this for you, provided he agrees to the procedure.”

And while Zenipeq asked for a [Reincarnation], Quilatalap decided that he would ask for a residency at Candlepoint, or wherever. There were few places in the world where Quilatalap could go without attracting a crusade, and Erick’s House Benevolence might just be one such location.

He wouldn’t know until he tried.

Zenipeq lowered her head a fraction. “Gratitude.” Then she rose. “I will be ready to leave within four hours, if that is acceptable.”

Quilatalap nodded. “Best get to moving.”

Zenipeq took her leave, turning to mist and vanishing out the windows to crash down into the city below like a fog bank. Sentient gargoyle turrets made of ice and death briefly flickered their undead senses at the quick movement of a nearby soul, but then they turned back to ice statues at the verification of Zenipeq. Far below, the Ice Wraith Queen began spreading through her land, controlling the outbreak of the day’s big news as she went about preparing the city for her eternal departure.

Theoretically, she could come back here once the Dragon Essence was cleared from her soul and she was reborn again, but she would have to regain her power and her magic in order to be a ruler once again, and she would have to do it without Dragon Essence powering all of her spellwork. Regaining her baseline power might take a few years if she never misstepped, but the loss of Dragon-based power would put her at the current level of her second in command, and third and fourth and all the way through to at least the eleventh, if Quilatalap was guessing correctly and Zenipeq had not lied about that. She could not rule this land again through power, as she always had.

Which meant that she could never really come back. She would be killed within the year, if not on-sight.

And, as she had confessed to Quilatalap in calmer spaces with some enjoyable drink, she could see herself enjoying a new life in a living body. Taking it easy. For a while, at least.

Quilatalap stepped forward and gazed across the land. Death Throne was a line of darkness and spikes of the same all across the western horizon, while the ice towers of Frostflower poked up here and there among the somewhat pastoral lands of Zenipeq’s domain. All around this land were the houses and fields of people who used their undead servitors to grow —not [Grow]— quite a lot of semi-magical and magical plants.

For half a moment, Quilatalap thought about bringing some plants to grow at his next house, and possibly even at Candlepoint if that option should work out. But then he remembered that he was shit at growing plants. The box for [Grow] might as well have read ‘[Blight]’ for him, as the saying went.

But maybe Erick would like a gift? A gift might make Quilatalap’s request for asylum more palatable. And hey! Maybe Erick could use a proper necromancer for his new Wizardly empire? Most places could use an archlich necromancer, in Quilatalap’s opinion. People died way too often, in his opinion. Not many places could bring back the dead, and with Erick able to make them actually young again? Well… That would be pretty amazing, right?

Zenipeq had certainly needed his help when he came here, and now this latest batch of students at Frostflower’s school was looking to be one of their best graduations yet! At least double the usual amount of successful liches. Quilatalap improved every place he went, or at least he tried.

If he went to Candlepoint, and Erick accepted him… What would a world look like without true death, and with eternal [Reincarnation]s for all? That had been one of Quilatalap’s goals when he started learning necromancy, all the way back in the Old Cosmology, back when he had a normal orc body, and not this orcol-thing he currently wore.

Perhaps, with Erick’s power, such a world would actually be possible! Or, at least, Quilatalap could teach Erick how to [True Resurrection], so that more people knew of that spell. That plan hadn’t worked out so well with Messalina for she had done some strange things to her version of [True Resurrection], but Erick was certainly a better person than Messalina. Erick could do that magic right, and maybe Erick could teach Quilatalap how to [Reincarnation] in return.

Quilatalap smiled as he stared out across the world.

Yes.

It was time to move on.

After Ar’Kendrithyst fell, Quilatalap had needed to bum around a few different places, looking for a good fit. Sometimes Quilatalap’s choice simply didn’t work for whatever multitudes of reasons, like with the Temple of Shadow’s Light and their sudden civil war, or with Zenipeq and Fairy Moon’s ultimatum. Ar’Kendrithyst had been absolutely filled with a bunch of people doing terrible things to whoever came inside, not to mention all the monsters, but that land had been the only one that had taken Quilatalap in and then respected him. It was hard to find that sort of stability in this world.

But now that Candlepoint was up and running…

Maybe?

Quilatalap certainly wasn’t going to be a hermit, if he could help it.

- - - -

Erick was not allowed to visit Spur directly. He could not just appear on the streets, or at his old house as though he still lived there. Firstly, his old house was gone; torn down due to some hateful act by some random group of people months ago. Erick never bothered to look into that, but he was pretty sure it was the Dragon Stalkers. He had sent them a letter about that, asking them if the rumors he heard were true. They had sent him some threatening letters about working with dragons, but he sent them a threatening letter right back, and then the correspondence stopped.

But even if his house had still been there, and intact, he would not be allowed to go there.

For foreign kings were different things altogether from foreign archmages, or even Wizards. There was protocol. There was ceremony. He couldn’t enter a foreign nation without being invited, or without requesting an invitation. And so that is how Erick found himself sending a formal letter of request to visit Spur, and receiving a formal denial of that request.

Erick stared down at the letter in his hands, having read it a few times now, but still not fully understanding what he was reading. Oh, sure, the words made sense enough.

To the Wizard King, Erick Flatt of Candlepoint. It is the sorrow of Spur that we cannot accept your request to visit at this time. Instead, we would visit you there, in House Benevolence, though it will just be Al and I. Sirocco and Mog are consumed with work at the moment. Let us know what time is a good time and we will make this happen. A contact through Mister Fulisade is acceptable. -Silverite

Erick set down the letter, then glanced out to the Financial District, to the smaller road of Gates which ran parallel to the main Gate Road, but on a road all the way past Mage Bank. It was there that Erick had put the Gate to Spur. Candlepoint had a similar Gate, linking them to the Gate District. That gate lay directly at the end of the north-south road that went up from House Benevolence, and stopped near Mage Bank. Spur’s Gate was next to that one.

Spur’s Gate, just like Candlepoint’s Gate, was as busy as ever, with a bunch of people walking in and out of both sides of the open space, dropping their coins off in guarded boxes if they were individual travelers, or stopping traffic if they had a wide load that needed to come though. Those stops didn’t happen too often, for usually people marshaled their goods onto 2 meter wide, and somewhat long [Force Platform]s that could go through the Gate without interruption.

From there, those goods, or those people, either walked to their next Gate, or blipped over to their next Gate, and another set of brief inspections and money collections. There were a lot of people moving back and forth out there. A lot.

And there would be more as more and more Gates opened up across the world.

Erick looked at the Gate to Spur, and considered [Perfected Polymorph]ing into an orcol, or an incani, or something, and just walking through, and seeing Spur for himself. He hadn’t been there in a long time…

But. No. That would be improper. Rude, even.

Erick would make a decision about meeting Al soon enough. It hadn’t even been five hours since Illustrious Moon’s revelation about the exodus of dragons. He had time… Probably. Did Al have time, though? Did Silverite even know why Erick had wanted to meet Al?

Erick asked Poi, “Should I have been less circumspect? Just straight-up told her why I needed to see him? And not included the desire to see Mog and Sirocco, too?”

Poi said, “I cannot be certain, for I do not communicate with Spur nearly as often as I used to, but I am of the opinion that Silverite knows exactly what is going on.”

It was just the two of them in his office at the moment. The sun sat low in the western sky, and while people and goods walked across the Gate District like trails of ants, inside House Benevolence most people were either getting ready to stop for the day, or already stopped, and eating down at the atrium food court. The Cooks and the servers and otherwise were kicking into high gear, though. A lot of night life was beginning to start, as the shadelings of Candlepoint were starting the second half of their day.

A few people were still working hard at House Benevolence, besides Erick. Zolan and a few others were in deep talks with finalizing the Wayfarer’s Local Area Gate Network of the Crystal Forest, which was yet another thing that had suddenly decided it needed to happen today, of all days. Perhaps the Wayfarer’s had heard the news of the dragons, too, and they wanted to stop tiptoeing around actually committing to Erick’s designs.

Erick glanced through Ophiel, to that meeting…

He came back. The Wayfarer’s Guild wanted their Local Area Gate Network by tomorrow, which was unexpected. Well that was fine? Zolan would probably be out of that meeting in the next half an hour, to come and tell Erick the news.

Erick asked Poi, “Do you think the Wayfarer’s know— Ah. You couldn’t tell me, anyway.”

Poi just nodded and continued to stand to the side.

“Kirginatharp knows.”

“And everyone who is smart will know that Kirginatharp is probably deep in seclusion, not wanting to accidentally see any dragons when they’re migrating across the world.”

“… Right.”

Erick turned his attentions back to the paperwork on his desk. None of the paperwork looked different than normal. Progress reports. Letters of requests for various things, from people all over the world. A few personal letters. Normal, end-of-day reports made by the Office of the Castellan, and the Office of Enforcement. That second stack was larger than most, for Erick had asked for projections of how much crime a Candlepoint-lake-wide [Zone of Peace] might stop, and Burhendurur had needed to talk to the Guard of Candlepoint, to Guard Captain Slip, in order to actually complete the report. The Office of Enforcement didn’t actually enforce over there, inside those city limits.

Based on normal incident reports, a true [Zone of Peace] layered across all of the greater Candlepoint area would stop approximately… 2 incidents per day? 1 major incident per week, like attempted murder? Five minor incidents per day in the Gate District? Nothing major ever reported, or seen in the Gate District?

That was it?

… This land wasn’t very populated; that had to be why. Also the Gates were rather heavily guarded and highly respected. Which was sort of unexpected. Erick had expected more crime, but… He supposed that there were only about 6,000 people living here, in total. Maybe a little more.

It was impossible to count specific people coming and going through the Gate District, but there were about 50,000 movements through the Gates every day. Some people moved back and forth a hundred times, moving goods here and there, while others just came in once to see what this place was all about, and then they left, spending a quick 2 gold for their time and transport.

With all that movement, Erick had expected more enforcement-related incidents.

“Poi. Please inform Silverite that a meeting in an hour is acceptable. Pick a place out of sight of most people, please. I can even meet outside of the city spaces if they want.”

Poi nodded, and then he sent out a thought tendril.

- - - -

A stunted tree with shade enough for half a person, stood in the middle of a field of dry grasses. This land used to be desert, so even this much was a vast improvement over the endless expanse of orange sand, but there was still a long way to go before this land could actually be called ‘reclaimed’. In the far distance stood the first of three walls that surrounded this land, separating this sparse greenery from the mimics. Seeing all this, Erick felt he needed to do more to help Kiri and Mox reclaim it all, but this land hadn’t been viable for growing anything in a long, long time. A simple [Exalted Rain Aura] didn’t change that. It took time to make something better than it was before.

Erick wasn’t here to deal with the land. Not right now. He wasn’t even technically ‘here’, in the reality-based sense of the word.

He was beyond an open door that stood in the middle of that land, which was not visible unless the viewer was standing at the perfect angle to view it, and they had permissions. The door was wide open, though, and Erick had told Al where to go, so that was plenty of invitation if Erick had anything to say about it.

That door led to a [Fairy Stronghold], where the Wizard sat on a nice, plush chair, alongside a table that held a tea set sized for mixed company, and a tray of cookies. A very large chair and another human-sized chair sat beside that tea table. The room was nothing special, but it was homey. It would serve.

Erick had spent all of twenty minutes getting the place ready for a private talk between himself and Al, and maybe Silverite too if she decided to stick around for any part of it. Erick could have conjured the whole place in less than 30 seconds, but he had found himself continually adding to the space, expanding the Stronghold to make it nicer, or adding flourishes here and there, like different tables or windows, that he thought Al might like. Erick had also stripped those same flourishes from the space a dozen times over, for frivolous shows of power and skill were not comforting when there was actual worry to be had over world events.

Like an exodus of dragons.

Erick was just nervous. That’s all this was.

Poi noticed. He stood to the side of the room, also looking at the door while waiting for Silverite and Al to arrive, but now he turned to Erick. “Do you want to talk about it? What do you expect to happen here? It might help calm your nerves.”

Erick instantly gushed, “Is he a dragon?! I don’t even know, for sure! All I have are clues and circumstantial evidence. How did he feel when he found out I was a Wizard? Did he want to come chase after me, like all the rest, in order to eat me? Or something?— No. Sorry. Not to eat; to stuff me with Dragon Essence and then twist my soul into something that would make him able to live free in this world? Like! I thought I knew the guy! I thought I knew dragons! But I didn’t! Not at all.”

“He didn’t know you at all, either, so you have that in common.”

Erick froze. “… Ah. I suppose so.” He mumbled, “I should have considered that position, too. Al never really knew me at all, did he.”

Poi nodded again. “And now, they’re on their way— Ah…?” A tendril of thought touched him. Poi said, “Silverite is unable to make it. Al is appearing now.”

Erick chuckled. “Yeah. I figured that might—”

Before Erick could finish his thought, and say that of course Silverite would not be appearing, and that it would just be Al, the man himself appeared on the other side of the door. The orcol looked just how Erick remembered. Tall by human standards, at nearly 3 meters, but rather average for an orcol. Muscular, with brown-green skin; again, rather average, compared to all the other orcols Erick had seen since he first laid eyes on this one. Black hair, black eyes; all normal. Tusks sticking up from his lower jaw, and if you didn’t know him, you would think him dangerous; again, rather average, physically.

When Erick had first seen Al, before he knew about the Blessing Of Beauty and Brutality from Aloethag, before he knew about the Rage and about Treehome, and about how orcols could tell if you were looking at them, Erick had thought that Al was one of the most beautiful men he had ever seen. Oddly enough, not an hour before that meeting, Erick had met Irogh, the Registrar of Spur, and he had thought that Irogh was the most beautiful man in the world.

There had been a lot of that in the beginning.

Now it was different, of course. Erick knew better.

Al still looked the same, though.

He probably still smiled a lot, when the weight of the world wasn’t bearing down on him, like it was now. His clothes were still immaculate, as befitting a sewermaster, and especially the sewermaster for a populous and prosperous city like Spur. Those clothes had always reminded Erick of a gangster-sultan, with a lot of pinstripes on charcoal grey. Al was always about clean lines down his body, but with some puffiness here and there. He had the body of a 50 year old orcol, and so he looked as good now as he had when he was 30…

He would likely look like this for as long as he wished, though. Normally, orcols aged gracefully, with their years not truly showing on their faces or their bodies until well into their 80s, and sometimes even past 100 if they kept throwing themselves into the physical rigors of life, and taking care of themselves. Orcols thrived on brutality.

But Al was not actually an orcol at all.

How had he gotten that body? Through the dragon-based [Perfected Polymorph] route, or did he eat the previous owner? Al had once said that it was Savral’s mother who was the dragon, but that had been a lie, hadn’t it? A lie of necessity, for the Dragon Curse certainly did exist, and so did the Dragon Stalkers. Those dragon hunters had probably accosted Al at least once or twice in his life, since they tended to do that to non-dragonkin who had dragonkin children. Those Dragon Stalkers had even pursued and killed Poi’s family for much the same—

“Ah, sorry, Poi,” Erick whispered, while not looking away from Al.

The door was open between Erick and Al, but Al could not see the door, and Erick had not shown him the door yet. Al searched high and low for the door, though, moving back and forth on the grassy sand, looking for that which he knew was here but which he could not see. He was rapidly becoming disgusted with himself.

Poi said, “You don’t need to apologize for your thoughts, Erick, but you do need to give Al some help finding the entrance.”

Al cursed at the sand, and at the air, he was angry at himself and a tendril of thought went away from his head—

Erick stepped up and stepped out of the [Fairy Stronghold]—

Al saw him, and froze. His tendril of thought broke.

A thousand thoughts flitted across Al’s face in that moment. A thousand unsaid words whirlpooled through Erick’s mind as well, without settling out into coherence much at all.

Neither of them had spoken to each other since Erick had left on the Worldly Path, and not even much before that. They had sort of fallen out of touch when Erick moved into his new house at the Human District and they stopped seeing each other every day…

Well.

Not ‘fallen out of touch’. Not really.

Erick had romantically pursued Al, and Al humored Erick for a little while. They had even gone on a date, and fucked in the Red Dream, though that… action… was more a result of fumbling minds and dreaming, than anyone actually meaning for it to happen. They had laughed about it afterward… A little. They had gone on with their lives a little. But then, it ended.

It was easy for Erick to recall their last meaningful interaction.

After the Red Dot had fallen, and Caradogh Pogi’s hunters had killed a bunch of people all around town, Erick had found Al sitting in the wreckage of the Sewerhouse. His son, Savral, was dead. Al preserved the body in a glass tomb. At Al’s request, Erick had asked Messalina for a [True Resurrection] for Savral. A lot of people chose to do that, and a lot of the dead came back to life. But [True Resurrection] wasn’t a perfect spell and Savral had vanished into the desert to try and find himself, to heal from that soul trauma.

It was in an orcol bar, with Erick sitting beside Al, enjoying the music and trying to take their minds off of their problems, when Savral decided to return. Savral had walked into the bar, and then into the welcoming arms of his father, and Erick left the two of them behind.

And that was one of the last times Erick had really seen Al.

And now, here he was again, and silence stretched.

Erick broke the silence, gesturing behind him into the protected space. “Come in for a chat?”

Al stood straight. “Yes.”

Erick moved inside, and Al followed. Poi said something about leaving them to it and then blipped away, back home. Ophiel was still here, though, sitting on the back of Erick’s chair, quietly whistling in uncomfortable flutes and unsure guitar twangs. Another Ophiel by the door gently swung the door shut. The space was now fully protected from spying… Probably.

Moments stretched.

Erick broke the silence again, asking, “How is Savral?”

“He’s doing great.” Al said, “It’s been a trial since… Since the murder, but he’s finally gotten some help with some Mind Mages in the last four months and… He’s a lot better. He had a few rough times with his girlfriend Bacci, too, but that seems to be evening out, and…” His voice trailed off.

The two of them stood in silence in the middle of the room.

“… Are you a dragon, Al?”

All the wind seemed to fall out of Al’s sails. “Yeah. I am. Are you making Benevolence Dragons?”

“… I don’t know about that. Seems like a step I don’t want to take.”

With a soft smile, breaking Al’s usually menacing face into something more normal, and yet still sad, Al said, “I don’t blame you. Who wants to be around dragons? Certainly not me.”

Al was still a deflated man, though he was doing his best to hide it. He had come here prepared for Erick to deny him, and yet now that the denial had happened, he still found it impossible. Now, he was faced with the unenviable choice of dying to Fairy Moon, or leaving behind Veird, to live in Ar’Cosmos for the rest of his life, however long that might be. Could be a long time. Or it could be as short as ‘step into Ar’Cosmos and piss off someone in charge, and get gutted within the hour’. With how many dragons Fairy Moon was forcing to come to Ar’Cosmos, and according to what Illustrious Moon had said…

And the refugees coming to Candlepoint’s lake…

If it wasn’t already, then Ar’Cosmos was going to become a bloodbath. Soon. Erick already guessed how that bloodbath would end, though; with Bright Smile in charge, or at least set up to take charge in the future.

Erick dismissed his thoughts of Benevolence tangles and asked, “Do you want a [Reincarnation] into your current form? To rid yourself of your Dragon Curse, and [Dragon Body]?”

“I’d be dead the next time someone attacked if I wasn’t a dragon.” Al said, “There are some side effects to being a dragon… Downsides. But I keep my head down. Haven’t met another dragon in a century. Silverite helps keep it that way.”

Erick tried to come up with another option. “Do you want me to put in a good word for you in Ar’Cosmos? I’m sure I can… Ensure you get preferential…” He stopped talking.

Al was shaking his head. “No. I’m not going into that small world, even if it is getting bigger. Savral is out here. I think he’s going to ask Bacci to marry him and I want to be there for them, and my grandchildren.”

Dreading the answer, Erick asked anyway, “What are you going to do?”

“I don’t know. If I could I would organize with other dragons and push back on Ar’Cosmos’ demands. We would be fighting that immortal fae, but… We can’t even attempt that, because of the Curse.” Al held out one final hope, asking, “Are you going to break the Curse?”

“… I can’t. It’s too much change. I’ve already promised not to interfere with that. I’m already doing everything I can for dragons… My offer is [Reincarnation]. I can offer the same to Savral. To Bacci, too, if she wants that. You can all start a new life somewhere else. Maybe in Spur? It’s getting big, right? You can lose yourself in… there...”

Al sighed. He eyed the large chair sitting beside the table, with the tea and the cookies. He went over and sat down, then he looked over at Erick, saying, “They don’t know I’m a dragon, and I never want them to know either.”

Erick sat down in his own chair.

Al said, “I don’t know about [Reincarnation]. Do you have time to talk, Erick?”

Erick smiled, saying, “I have all the time in the world. Just let me cast this spell here—” With a twitch of magic, time began to flow differently inside the [Fairy Stronghold] as a [Hasted Shelter] went up within the space. “—and now ten minutes might pass out there, but we have ten hours in here. Time Magic makes great sleeping magic.”

A bit of Al’s usual brightness came back. He chuckled, then laughed loud, and then sad. He breathed, and said, “You’ve done a lot more than I ever expected you to do, when you walked into my sewerhouse almost two years ago.” His joy seemed to return in full force as he teased, “You couldn’t even cast a [Gravity Ward] properly.”

Erick chuckled. “You were a shit teacher!”

“Bah!” Al laughed. “I taught perfectly normal Arcanaeum-approved curriculum! Just without all the math. You never liked all the math, anyway.”

“And I still don’t.” Erick asked, “So how has Spur been changing since I couldn’t go back? I haven’t looked. How have you been, Al?”

With a softer tone, Al said, “It’s been strange, finding out you were a Wizard. The garden committee— those people who worked the replacements for the Farms, the plots of lands around the Human District? They never stopped supplying Spur with food because your girl Kiri keeps the rains coming, but there were almost [Fireball]s in the streets, oh, tens of times.”

“Let me guess. Calizi versus Rollo. A fight over some crop or another?”

“I thought you hadn’t been watching?” Al said, with a smile.

“I haven’t been, but those two were always at each other’s throats. That much guessing is easy.”

Al nodded, saying, “It started with the sugar cactus fields...”

Al spoke of small time drama. Erick listened and asked questions. For a good long while, that is all they did. Erick canceled the [Hasted Shelter] to grab some beer and some food from the restaurants of House Benevolence, then the Shelter went right back up, and for a longer time.

Sitting there, eating fried monster chicken tenders and drinking beer with Al, as they each told each other jokes they had heard, was perhaps one of the best times Erick had had in the last few months. It reminded Erick of when the two of them used to go out to eat in Spur. He missed that.

He missed that a lot.

They spoke of everything under the sun which was not anywhere near the current crisis, or any big events.

Eventually, after several subjective hours (and several real minutes) the conversation drifted down to those heavy topics. Al spoke of his life as a dragon, and what it meant to have [Dragon Body]. They bounced off that topic hard when Al spoke of a Dragon Fight he had had when he was younger, where he killed a hundred people on purpose, and a thousand people accidentally. It was the opening of an old wound.

Erick opened his own wounds when he spoke of Terror Peaks, and the Chelation War.

And then… Everything just sort of spilled out of Erick in a horrible mess. All the death he had seen. All the death he had participated in. All the horrors of Veird.

He managed to pull it back a bit when he spoke of all the small wonders here and there, like seeing the White Palace of Stratagold, and the Core, and the adamantium chains of Enduring Forge, and clearing the Forest of Glaquin of moon reachers and deathsoul shrooms. He spoke of fighting monsters with Domains, and ending threats from half a world away for people who came to petition him for help, which he was easily able to give. He spoke of meeting new friends…

And reconnecting with old friends.

At that last part, Al’s happy demeanor shifted back to something more serious, as though he remembered that they were technically on a clock, even if that clock had been slowed way down. Which was probably exactly what happened.

Erick refilled his beer. But Al did not pick it up and drink.

Instead, Al said, “I never reciprocated your feelings because I lost my love a long time ago—”

“We don’t have to talk about that.”

“… I know. But I want to explain. You deserve that much. You deserve a lot, Erick, and I cannot give it to...” Al touched his chest, saying, “This person is not who I was. I did… Savral’s mother was— Let me back up. And don’t interrupt. I have to get this out there and then it’ll be said.

“I’ve been living in Spur for the last few hundred years, changing forms every so often depending on what positions were open in the town, under Silverite. Usually some sort of guard. Twice before I’ve been the Sewermaster. Whatever I could get in order to continue to benefit from Silverite’s protections, and in turn, to protect Spur when the need arose. Which I did just fine. Al was a form I adopted in Spur 35 years ago when it was time to remake myself. I invented him completely. He was not the first person I invented, but…

“But something stupid happened this time. I messed up my brain, or something, and I fell in love with a woman. An orcol woman named Alaidria. She was an adventurer. When we first met, she joked that we could be called ‘Al and Al’ on the wedding cake.” Al smiled, and then he lost that smile. “Eventually Alaidria knew everything about me, even about me being a dragon. Silverite told both of us that it was a stupid risk to go through with the pregnancy, but we went for it, because I was going to stick around and raise the kid even if Alaidria and I had to move away and I needed to change forms to a dragonkin to make Savral make sense. She gave birth to Savral.

“And then the Dragon Stalkers came down on us, exactly as Silverite had told us they would. Faster than we could have prepared, too. Silverite protected us as best she could, but…

“Alaidria died—” Al spoke solidly, “She was murdered, for she was a Shadow Mage and she pretended to be a black dragon and they all focused on her. I kept my cover.”

Silence.

Erick’s mind felt suddenly blank. He had no idea how to respond to that information.

Al wasn’t done. He said, “There was more to it than that. A cover up. People already hated Alaidria because she was a Shadow Mage and those always get a bad look around Ar’Kendrithyst. It was easy, in the end, for the unknowing public to believe that the ‘evil Shadow Mage who was probably a Cultist, too’ had been a dragon in disguise who had ‘corrupted the poor sewermaster’. That’s what dragons do in all the stories, after all. In public, Silverite ensured that the normal narrative held sway in Spur, but in private she held me when I cried.

“And that was over two decades ago. I thought I had gotten over it… Several times, actually. After Alaidria, I reverted to what I was before she came along. I just fucked people, Erick. No love, ever again. Mog was my hope for a stable, new relationship for a long time, but that just didn’t work.” Al said, “And that’s why I couldn’t be with you. You’re looking for something that I am incapable of giving anymore, because I already gave it all away to Alaidria. Dragons hold on to love trauma for a long, long time.” Al breathed in, then said, “And I’m a dragon.”

Erick sat there for a moment.

Al waited.

Erick asked, “So you’ve given up on your life, then?”

Al shifted in his seat, going from melancholy to a little bit angry. “I’d like it if a Wizard could solve my problems for me, but that’s not going to happen.”

Erick gave Al a flat look, and said, “Okay. So I can tell you are hurting, but for real though. Your pain is 25 years old and —by your own admittance— compounds yearly due to your continued draconic existence. Maybe if you had a mortal body you could leave behind that pain. And I’m still going to be around for a long time, so I can do a [Reincarnation] again for you in 50 years. You never have to be old unless you want it, Al. You can even become a dragon again if you want to in the next un-Cursed world, whenever that happens. There’s no downside to leaving behind your draconic life aside from leaving behind your endless pain! Pain is not a virtue, Al. Pain is just pain. If you can safely set it aside, then you have permission to do so.”

Al got a dark look. “Of course you don’t fucking understand. I would die without being a dragon, Erick!”

“Well I don’t want to become a dragon myself in order to make Benevolence Dragons! And you won’t die! You would just—”

“Stop.” Al blinked. “What? What are you talking about? About you becoming a dragon?”

“… That’s how it works, right? I become a dragon, then meld my Wizardry with the Dragon Essence, thus making Essence that is both Draconic and Something Else.”

For a brief moment, Erick had thought that Illustrious had lied to him about what was needed to make a Benevolence Dragon.

But then Al shouted, “You’re a damned Wizard! Why do you need rules?!”

Illustrious had not lied to him.

Erick tried to be calm as he said, “Because rules delineate how things work, and I am going to follow the rules to ensure that I don’t break anything that should not be broken, and I’m certainly not going to mess with the Dragon Curse without Kirginatharp’s support and presence.”

Al’s brown-green skin briefly flashed over in black scales, and then he growled and pulled those scales back in, saying, “Don’t. Don’t say his name.”

Erick breathed a few times; maybe he should have said ‘The Headmaster’. There was a reason beyond politeness that people used his moniker instead of his name.

Al simply breathed, too, but black light flashed in his eyes. After a moment he winced, and stared at the ground. “This was a mistake. I should have stayed away.”

“If you think I’m going to endanger the world for one person, then you don’t know me at all.”

“No, Erick. I thought— I thought it would be easy for you. I didn’t think that this would be difficult at all! I thought you could just ZAP and then it’d be done, and I could go back to my life as a normal orcol! I could pretend to not be a dragon for a while longer. Maybe I could actually die as a normal orcol, too; of old age and forgetting about the pain of my youth.”

What the fuck?

Dying of old age?

And now Erick was mad. “You’ve already given up, haven’t you? Completely!”

“Well I’ve certainly given up now.”

“Gods dammit, Al. You gave up when Alaidria was murdered, didn’t you?”

“… I have not,” Al said, lying.

“You’re not allowed to give up, Al. As your friend I demand you think my offer of [Reincarnation] over for a day or four. Okay? You can stay here or I can make you a home on Yggdrasil—”

“No. I can’t. I’ve already thought it over and if you cannot help then I must… I must do something drastic.”

“Do you even know what that ‘something’ might be?”

“Yeah! Find a way to kill that fae who demands this of us dragons!”

“Might as well try to kill the stone under our feet; all you ever do is end up moving it around, and if you’re not careful, you bury yourself.” Erick said, “You told me that one time.”

“Look. I can’t stay here, anyway. You think I'm the only dragon coming to see you? No. I haven’t seen any others and I don’t want to know if there have been others, but I will not start a fight in your lands.” Al said, “And I need to get my things in order. Settle debts. Set up Savral for the rest of his life. Attempt to take down that fairy.”

“Al. Please.” Erick said, “Don’t do anything drastic until the last possible minute, and please think of my offer. Don’t just dismiss it out of hand. At least consider it—” Erick had a thought. “And I do not want to give you false hope, but I might have other options opening up. I don’t know what those options are, but they might work. DO NOT do anything you cannot undo. Okay? Please, Al.”

Al looked lost.

And then Erick got really mad. “You just dropped this fucking shit on my lap and expect me to clean up your mess but also fuck up the entire balance of the entire world! And for fucking what! So you can be stronger than the people around you! So you can hold onto your pain! That’s bullshit, Al. FUCKING BULLSHIT. So you will WAIT. And you will SEE. And I will TRY to see if I have other options than [Reincarnation] or LETTING YOU COMMIT SUICIDE!”

Al gained a faint smile—

“Don’t you fucking smile at me you fucking selfish piece of shit. Go home, Al. And DON’T DO ANYTHING STUPID, ASSHOLE.”

Al said, “Thank you, Erick.”

And then Al left with a blip of black magic.

He was probably experiencing some minor time-decompression sickness for leaving like that, but FUCK HIM. He was fine. For a long moment Erick just stood there in the [Fairy Stronghold], seething.

When he had calmed down enough he canceled all the magic around him and stepped away, through the light and about 75 kilometers away, to his next destination.

- - - -

The True Interfaith Church of Candlepoint loomed before him like a gothic white and black edifice to divine power. The large doors were open, inviting all the world to come and see the gods, and to hear the good word. A few people were coming out of the church. They looked like adventurers, with mismatched armor and magical items on their belts, and twitchy hands that reached for weapons in scabbards.

They were foreigners on an investigative mission. Erick had seen many people like them come and go from Candlepoint, even from way before he ascended to power in this land. He saw adventurers all the time back in Spur, too. Back when Erick was living at Spur, when adventurers saw him they got a shock of recognition and then smiles and bows happened.

This time the adventurers recognized Erick (mostly Ophiel on his shoulder) and one of them screamed ‘Wizard!’ All of them rapidly vanished in a coordinated splash of [Teleport], likely all of them headed toward some prearranged destination.

Whatever!

An acolyte of the church, who had been trailing the adventurers to make sure they didn’t do anything stupid, heard the cry of ‘Wizard’. That guy was much more respectful to Erick. He apologized on behalf of those who didn’t know any better.

Erick halfway-ignored the acolyte and walked inside.

Any other day, Erick would have wanted to strike up a conversation with the acolyte, and then with all the priests who came running as soon as they heard that Erick was nearby. He could not, though, and there was nothing dangerous happening right now besides Erick’s own presence. He acknowledged the acolyte’s efforts with some curt words, though, then said a few small words of greeting to the priests who came out to see him. He tried to be personable with the various parishioners who came out of nowhere to see him—

He excused himself and continued on into the back. Toward the hall of the gods, where each god had a space dedicated specifically to them. Erick was on a mission.

He was going to find a solution to letting certain dragons stay on Veird without resorting to curing the Dragon Curse, or [Reincarnation], or dealing with Fairy Moon. It was probably time for him to come here, anyway; he had been putting this off for months.

And he had to talk to Melemizargo about Shadow’s Feast, to make sure nothing bad was going to happen.

Comments

luxrus

NOOOOO THE CLIIIIIFFFFFF

Collateral_ink

Quilatalap and Erick in the same zip code is a recipe for disaster. Erick has a deep desire, almost a compulsion, to help people, meanwhile Quilatalap has a pathological need to teach while also being apparently incapable of telling when he really shouldn't. Thankfully, Erick's otherwise self-destructive tendency towards introspection assists in (sometimes) preventing him from helping when he shouldn't; Quilatalap seems more like he just acknowledges the fact he sucks at determining when and what to teach but has yet to make any effort to actually change that fact about himself. Though, combining [Reincarnation] and [True Resurrection] into a single spell seems very interesting. Add in a Phylactery spell and Erick might be as unkillable as Fairy Moon.

Foxmoor Fiction

Ah yes, have to love Eric. All people opposed to me summoning the devil now? Ah... Looks like I will do that later. Also, very sad about the dragon bit. I want Eric to become a dragon.

Tsula

I too would like to see Erick the dragon. It probably won't happen, but maybe Rozeta's solution will get us there? Heh His main problem with the "become a dragon" path seemed to be bending to that fae who will not be named. Unless I misread.

Anonymous

Gonna be a very long week… tftc!

John Anastacio

Erick would also have to change his body and personality and everything by taking on Dragon Essence. It would be a major change for him after just a few months of being Protean. I wouldn't want to do that myself.

Tsula

Would it change his personality after he paradoxes to benevolence though? He IS benevolence, magically speaking. So one would think benevolence would make dragons more like Erick.

Foxmoor Fiction

Actually, the fact that he is a protean might be part of the solution, considering it seems to come with a form of superior shapeahifting

Gardor

Why doesn't rozetta want to fix the dragon curse? And was silverite sacrificing people to Al so he could get a new form?

RD404

because the curse keeps dragons from taking over the world and fighting over everything until nothing is left dragons don't need to eat people to polymorph into a new form.

Rebecca

I thought spatial magic didn’t work right in the underworld because of gravity and the cleansed mana streams interfering with the script’s automation process. Was this a reference to melemizargo messing up the formation and structure of the underworld, thus leading to the current state of affairs, or is there some other way he is influencing this?

RD404

spatial magic does not work in the underworld because that is where Melemizargo has decided to prevent such magic from working, just as the Shades of Ar'Kendrithyst can prevent people from teleporting, too. the way that this prevention works is all about ensuring that fights happen, instead of allowing people to bypass monsters, or to escape from fights. this is done because Melemizargo hates the wrought, and he locks them down. this is how it has always been, since the beginning of the story.

Anonymous

Arcs…you’re torturing us with almost a yes to benevolence dragons and then a no to benevolence dragons. So next week maybe yes benevolence dragons? Pretty please.

John Anastacio

Tsula: It's the dragon part that's the problem. All dragons seem to be territorial, materialistic, and greedy, and they have rage problems. We know that Paradox'ed dragons avoid much of the Dragon curse but it's still a major change to personality. Even worse, it is inheritable. As in, if Erick ever had more kids, they'd get it, too.

Foxmoor Fiction

Well he is a paradox wizard, of anyone can make a dragon without all the negative traits it would be him. A paradoxically undragonlike dragon.

Anonymous

Is there any chance of just a very rough map of the layout of the gate district? And maybe once the new cities are established of the lake and how candlepoint, the gate district and the new cities relate to each other? I'm quite a visual learner and I'm struggling a bit with the descriptions of how everything is laid out in relation to everything else, and quite how the embassies, gate road, financial district, and house benevolence would look

Anonymous

Possibly a disaster, but maybe Erick could teach Quilatalap some benevolence magic which would allow him some foresight as when teaching someone some particular piece of necromancy would lead to disaster for the world and prevent further lifebinder situations. Plus Quilatalap is powerful enough in his own right that Erick wouldn't have to have the same ethical worries that he does around consent with most other people around him who are largely under his power and thus make any kind of relationship problematic. He can just get that undead boning he really needs : )

RD404

There is a map on the discord. you should have access as a patron. if you do not wish to look there then you might be able to see this; it is as of chapter 200: https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/782771420643459113/995597479716327434/unknown.png

Anonymous

Thank you so much! I only just joined the patreon (having binged the entire story in a frenzy on RR) and hadn't checked out the discord yet. That is super helpful, and makes it all make more sense

Anonymous

I migh be pushing my luck here, but since you so kindly replied I might as well ask. I've looked through the maps on the discord and they are fantastic, but there are a few places I've always wondered where they were located that aren't marked on the maps. Any chance of an update of the Glaquin map that shows where Ar'cosmos (or at least the twisted vision) and Treehome are? And potentially on the world map it would be great to know where the enduring forge was, and we've heard lots about Eidolon, but no idea which part of Nergal it is. And we've heard about the Ar’Civ River on Quintlan twice in the last chapter. I guess I'm just a map geek am insatiably curious about how this world all fits together lol

RD404

Added another map in #maps! an updated Veird. https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/782771420643459113/1010691065528975493/LitRPG_veird.jpg

Anonymous

You are absolutely amazing, thank you so much, you have made my geeky little heart incredibly happy!

Anonymous

"Sure, Al was rather bad at magic, but Erick certainly wasn’t a normal student." - should this read "Sure, Al was rather bad at *teaching* magic" ?

Anonymous

"Volaro answered, “The southeastern side" - should this be the southwestern side instead? They were discussing the southwestern side both before and after this with no other mention of the southeast, seems like it might have been a mistake?